Missa cuiusvis toni
Missa Cuiusvis Toni (lit. “Mass in any mode”) is a four-part
The work's name reflects the fact that it may be sung in any of the Dorian, Phrygian, Lydian or Mixolydian modes. This is made possible by writing the music without clefs or key signatures, allowing the singers to assume those suited to the chosen mode.[4] This unusual and complex idea has led the musicologist Fabrice Fitch to describe the mass as "the work chiefly responsible for Ockeghem's reputation as an artful pedant".[5]
Although Leeman L. Perkins describes the Missa Cuiusvis Toni as "not unduly complex in its contrapuntal style",
Recordings
- Missa Cuiusvis Toni, æon, ÆCD 0753 (2 CDs; 2007), performed by Ensemble Musica Nova, Lucien Kandel. First recording of the four versions. Ed. Gérard Geay.
Notes
- ^ Cadences in Phrygian mode cannot have the fifth degree of the scale (B♮ in E Phrygian) in the bass of the penultimate chord, as this would give rise to a diminished triad. To solve this, Ockeghem uses the fourth degree of the scale in the bass at these points.[4]
References
- JSTOR 939121.
- JSTOR 830135.
- JSTOR 3137736.
- ^ ISBN 978-0-19-538481-9.
- ^ JSTOR 3128304.
- ISBN 978-1-56159-239-5.
- ^ JSTOR 1193859.